
In terms of her individual performance, the 2018 season was a year to forget for Noelle Quinn. But winning the first WNBA title of her career made all of the sacrifices worth it.
Noelle Quinn By the Numbers
- 1.5 PPG
- 0.7 APG
- 0.1 SPG
- .302 FG%
- .235 3P%
- .349 TS%
- 13.3 USG%
- 9.9 AST%
- 18.9 TO%
- 89.4 ORtg
- 93.7 DRtg
- -0.3 WS
Break in Case of Emergency
When the Seattle Storm re-signed Quinn in February, her role on the team was pretty clear even though the team was two months away from selecting Jordin Canada in the 2018 draft.
“Noelle brings a veteran leadership presence to our team that is invaluable,” Storm general manager Alisha Valavanis said in the team’s press release. “Her experience in the WNBA, leadership on the court and basketball IQ will continue to be a resource for our team.”
Whether Valavanis knew at that point Canada was the preferred target, Seattle wasn’t going to settle on Quinn as the backup point guard behind Sue Bird.
What do you get the team that has everything? Seattle Storm general manager Alisha Valavanis and head coach Dan Hughes are about to find out as they look to build on a 2018 season in which the Storm were WNBA champions for the third time.
The Seattle Storm are going to the 2018 WNBA Finals.
The Seattle Storm drew first blood in their 2018 WNBA playoff semifinal series against the Phoenix Mercury on Sunday at KeyArena in Seattle.
The Seattle Storm maintained a two-game lead on the Atlanta Dream with an 81-72 win over the Minnesota Lynx on Sunday in Minneapolis.
The Seattle Storm clinched a playoff spot with Friday’s 85-75 win over the Minnesota Lynx.
You’ve probably noticed by now I haven’t written about the Seattle Storm in nearly a month.
The Seattle Storm picked up another big win Friday against the Connecticut Sun, handing the Sun their third straight loss in an 103-92 victory.
After laying an egg on offense in their defeat Sunday to the Atlanta Dream, the Seattle Storm exploded for 96 points in a win over the Chicago Sky on Tuesday night.